five

Weber's law, the magnitude effect and discrimination of sugar concentrations in nectar-feeding animals

收藏
DataONE2020-06-24 更新2025-04-19 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:830919c46456b3bb370b0ccc967cc82ac2a5127a8e2dbb1a2d1be309bb0acc65
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
Weber’s law quantifies the perception of difference between stimuli. For instance, it can explain why we are less likely to detect the removal of three nuts from a bowl if the bowl is full than if it is nearly empty. This is an example of the magnitude effect – the phenomenon that the subjective perception of a linear difference between a pair of stimuli progressively diminishes when the average magnitude of the stimuli increases. Although discrimination performances of both human and animal subjects in various sensory modalities exhibit the magnitude effect, results sometimes systematically deviate from the quantitative predictions based on Weber’s law. An attempt to reformulate the law to better fit data from acoustic discrimination tasks has been dubbed the “near-miss to Weber’s law”. Here, we tested the gustatory discrimination performance of nectar-feeding bats (Glossophaga soricina), in order to investigate whether the original version of Weber’s law accurately predicts choice beh...
创建时间:
2025-04-10
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务